food/cooking tips (2)
@mynameistillian Oh, and a very important note to save spoons: ingredient quantities and cooking times in recipes are basically bullshit.
Unless a recipe specifically says an amount or time period is *exact*, you should imagine that there's an "approximately" in front of it. There are very few things where it actually is as precise as the recipe would suggest.
food/cooking tips
@mynameistillian Not exactly a direct answer to the question, but I do have some tactics I/we have used to reduce the spoons cost of food logistics (which for me has helped by leaving more spoons for actually trying out new recipes from eg. the web, as well as reducing waste):
- Cook for several days at once, then freeze portions in (heat-safe) freezer bags, and on subsequent days just take out a bag and boil it (bag and all) in a pot of hot water until the food inside is hot. Tastes almost fresh, and heats evenly.
- Get (any) cheap contact grill. Most meats and meat replacements can be cooked on these, and it is almost impossible to burn stuff on it, so you can let it cook almost unattended. Eliminates an entire thing you need to watch.
- Oven dishes; even a cheap toaster oven works. Get an oven dish (I used a square metal one), fill it with ingredients (vegetables, potatoes, meats, fish, whatever), sprinkle with a little salt, cover with tinfoil and oven unattended for like 45 minutes, then 15 more minutes without the tin foil. Ta-da, tasty meal with no coordination, works with basically any ingredients.
- Sauce does a lot of the work; if you learn a few simple and tasty sauces, you can cobble together a meal from almost any ingredients you have laying around, without even needing to plan ahead much. An example of such a sauce would be (a small amount of) peanut butter + chili (flakes) + cream. Another would be fruit jam + banana. But it depends on what is available locally, the basic formula is "goopy liquid + high-flavour ingredient + maybe spices".
- Likewise, macaroni combines well with almost any kind of meat (replacement) and vegetables, and stays good for a very long time (dry) in storage.
Generally I'd recommend building up a basic set of simple and cheap dishes that you like and can make with low energy, so that you have a reliable food supply, and then gradually experimenting with variations over time to figure out where your preferences and spoons limits lie. "Rice with vegetables" and "pasta with vegetables" are both good basic dish formats and don't require much else.
Remember that the NAACP is calling for a massive boycott of Walmart, McDonald's and Meta because of their about face on DEI under pressure from the vague notions of the US president and his friends.
I would appreciate it you participated in this boycott too. It seems like it's pretty big.
(The NAACP has likely spoken with people at these organizations and found no common ground. They kind of hate calling for corporate boycotts so I can only imagine they go nowhere and were disgusted.)
So, summing up: software estimates are bad and wrong because even people asking for them rarely want good ones, and an effective project will learn enough as it goes to make them obsolete.
If you have to do one, fine, hold your nose and do it in a low-cost way, and then run your project in such a way that your stakeholders get what they actually need, both in terms of software and politics. But for many projects it's sufficient to just get on with the project.
Either way, it's usually possible to work with integrity. And if not, estimates are the least of your problems, so remember that developers are still in high demand, so it's worth looking for a job that won't eat your soul.
15/15
I think the right answer depends a ton on circumstances. But what has worked for me is to listen very carefully to find the actual needs behind the stated needs, and find ways to satisfy the actual needs without feeling like I'm grossly compromising my own integrity.
11/
fascism, furry fandom, twitter (cw boost)
Eventually this transition point will end, and either we have come out the other side a more open and free global society where digital access isn't gatekept by tech oligopolies... Or those that failed to gear down are now fully captive to those same tech oligopolies, unable to own anything.
I can't claim the term, I learned it from the late Eric Flint, author of SF alternate history Ring of Fire/1632 series.
But it really is where we are at, we're still in a transition point where we can build communities based on older and more open standards and where physical media is still obtainable and reproducible, with storage cheap enough to hold digital copies of that media locally. Older technology and appliances are still useful enough that we can learn the skills to maintain/repair.
I've decided to embrace my lack of high speed internet during the week. It will encourage me to stick to my principles on "gearing down."
Gearing down is the concept of using a currently available higher level of technology or convenience from the same to build out a more sustainable lower level of technology or convenience before the current higher level runs out.
This is really what people are talking about when they say to combat enshittification we need to go back to X or Y:
Gearing down
CW-boost: queermisia
The freedom to let others make my decisions for me is nearly as vital as the freedom to make important decisions myself.
Some people see "empowerment" as helping people to do everything themselves but that's an overly individualist approach. What empowers me is systems/cultures of transparency, accountability, and flexible delegation that help me rely on my community.
@q This is not what we meant when we said "cross-operator rail ticketing should work like cross-operator plane ticketing"
mutual aid post, FINAL UPDATE
hi.
i am tillian. you probably have boosted this fundraiser post in the past, wondering where i went.
well, i moved!
i finally made the jump and collected enough money to last me for months on my own. i have my own apartment, and i am now living away from my abusive parents.
i am so, so, so thankful to all of you. this plan would have never left the ground without all of your undying support.
i owe you. all of you.
thank you.
love. so much love.
NAACP lists companies that dump #DEI in its tactical spending guide for Black Americans - I love the idea of a ‘tactical spending guide’. #NoBuy #Boycott #BlackHistoryMonth #BlackMastodon #BLM https://apnews.com/article/black-consumers-dei-buying-guide-naacp-34664d8af92e2dc1ba787a498348b7a4
grateful to everyone who contributes to https://gaza.memorial/, it means so much to log into the moderation and find new voices there 🙏
@q Plane replacement train?
Turns out, Hash Tables are good...?
(wait. they always were!)
Undergraduate Upends a 40-Year-Old Data Science Conjecture
... searches within data structures called hash tables can be much faster than previously deemed possible ...
https://www.quantamagazine.org/undergraduate-upends-a-40-year-old-data-science-conjecture-20250210
The actual Paper is here:
https://arxiv.org/abs/2501.02305
(the article erroneously refers to the older Tiny Pointers paper 2111.12800, which is just mentioned in a footnote but also really cool for game devs)
In the process of moving to @joepie91. This account will stay active for the foreseeable future! But please also follow the other one.
Technical debt collector and general hype-hater. Early 30s, non-binary, ND, poly, relationship anarchist, generally queer.
- No alt text (request) = no boost.
- Boosts OK for all boostable posts.
- DMs are open.
- Flirting welcome, but be explicit if you want something out of it!
- The devil doesn't need an advocate; no combative arguing in my mentions.
Sometimes horny on main (behind CW), very much into kink (bondage, freeuse, CNC, and other stuff), and believe it or not, very much a submissive bottom :p
My spoons are limited, so I may not always have the energy to respond to messages.
Strong views about abolishing oppression, hierarchy, agency, and self-governance - but I also trust people by default and give them room to grow, unless they give me reason not to. That all also applies to technology and how it's built.